WRONG!

Actually, after I made that change, Google Analytics assumed that now the same page was actually TWO different pages, so the traffic data in one started to go down, while the the data in the other started to go up:

Here’s the traffic data with the “old” permalink structure:

And this one with the new one:

Same page, but now that it was being accessed via a “different” URL (with an extra “/” at the end), Google Analytics started to see it as two different pages. (Note that apparently I made the change on Sept 12, since that’s when traffic started to move from one page to another).

Bummer.

Needless to say, now I have “duplicated” pages all over my traffic data, because the extra “/” was added to all pages on the site. I corrected the permalink to what it was before, and hopefully everything will go back to normal.

The takeway

Modifying your site’s permalink (or link) structure will definitely take a toll on your traffic data. Fortunately, in this case, people (and search engines) can still get to the aforementioned page (phew!) But if your permalink structure has changed drastically and there are no redirection solutions implemented, a page that was ranking really high in search results will actually go down until the “new” page takes the time to crawl up, and that can take a while…